If you're trying to keep a happy face at work and with friends while panicking inside.
Speaker AIf you've become an expert at appearing fine while secretly terrified you're going to lose your child, this episode will name the double life that's breaking you.
Speaker AWelcome to More Human, More Kind, the podcast helping parents of LGBTQ kids move from fear to fierce allyship and feel less alone and more informed so you can protect what matters, raise brave kids, and spark collective change.
Speaker AI'm Heather Hester.
Speaker ALet's get started.
Speaker ALet's be honest for a moment, because pretending is exhausting.
Speaker AMost parents I work with describe how they're feeling as living two separate lives.
Speaker AThe one the world sees, where you hold it together with practiced smiles and quick deflections.
Speaker AAnd the inner one, the one where your chest is tight and your breath is shallow, where your mind won't stop spinning and you're running constant what if scenarios.
Speaker AYou're physically present at work or volunteering at school in a meeting, but internally, you're bracing for impact.
Speaker AConstantly checking your phone, showing up with that practiced I'm fine, wondering if today is the day something breaks.
Speaker ABut what if that performance is part of what's keeping you stuck?
Speaker AIn this episode, you'll discover why the performance of being okay is making everything worse.
Speaker AYou'll discover the hidden cost of maintaining two separate realities.
Speaker AAnd you'll discover how the happy face is preventing you from actually getting the help you desperately need.
Speaker ASo let's break this down into what it may look like for you.
Speaker APerhaps you're trying to keep a happy face at work and with friends.
Speaker AWelcome.
Speaker ACompletely panicking inside.
Speaker AAnd it's not just panicking.
Speaker AIt's constant emotional triage.
Speaker AYou're scanning for danger, monitoring tone shifts, reading micro expressions, googling symptoms at midnight.
Speaker AThis is hypervigilance, and it's what trauma researchers call living in the amygdala.
Speaker AYou are always prepared for worst case scenarios.
Speaker AOr maybe you're getting very little sleep and have very little focus.
Speaker ABecause of that, and are 24 hours a day worrying about your child and your family.
Speaker AYour body has likely slid into chronic stress mode.
Speaker AThe research on this is substantial and quite clear.
Speaker AOngoing parental fear mimics trauma responses.
Speaker AYour cortisol is up, your executive function is down, and your ability to problem solve or comfort your child is compromised.
Speaker ANot because you're failing, but because you're human.
Speaker APerhaps, like I mentioned in the intro, you're working so hard to keep the two parts of your life separate.
Speaker AYou have a work you and a home you and Neither one is getting the real you.
Speaker ASplitting yourself like this is an actual psychological survival mechanism, but long term, it's absolutely unsustainable.
Speaker AIt erodes confidence, drains emotional reserves, and creates a pressure chamber inside your body.
Speaker AAnd finally, perhaps you've had moments when you've totally lost your temper at work and realized you weren't keeping control like you thought you were.
Speaker AAnd the shame that you felt afterward, the self judgment.
Speaker AThat's often the moment parents reach out to me, the moment the I can do this all alone story finally cracks.
Speaker ADo you feel frustrated or helpless because your work performance is suffering?
Speaker ABecause you can't concentrate?
Speaker AAnd even worse, because nobody knows why the emotional bandwidth required to parent a child in crisis leaves you with cognitive fatigue.
Speaker ADecision making becomes harder.
Speaker AEmails sit unanswered.
Speaker AYour usual tasks and projects take so much more energy and focus.
Speaker APerhaps you even begin to fear someone will notice the slipping.
Speaker AMaybe you've distanced yourself from your friends and you're worried that your friends think that you're distant and cold, when really they have no idea that you're completely drowning.
Speaker AHear me when I say this.
Speaker AYou're not distant.
Speaker AYou're terrified of saying the wrong thing or saying too much or falling apart if someone simply asks, are you okay?
Speaker AUgh, this next one is so hard.
Speaker ADoes your marriage feel strained because you're hiding how you're feeling?
Speaker AWhat you're thinking from your spouse, too?
Speaker AKeeping up this double life often means you're not sharing the full impact, the full, full fear.
Speaker AI know.
Speaker AI totally did this.
Speaker AYou pull away because you don't want to burden them or because you're afraid they won't understand.
Speaker AAnd meanwhile, they're wondering why you're shutting them out.
Speaker AYou're so busy maintaining the facade of some or all of the above scenarios that you can't actually help your child.
Speaker AAnd this is the heartbreaking truth.
Speaker AYou think the mask or protective layers are protecting your family, when in reality, they are blocking connection between you and your partner, between you and your child, and between you and the help that would actually lighten the load.
Speaker AThe mask or protective layers aren't protecting anyone.
Speaker AThe reality is they're just isolating you from the support you desperately need, all while your child spirals.
Speaker AI know that feels harsh.
Speaker AAnd this is the quiet tragedy that no one talks about.
Speaker AThe mask, the layers, they all keep you from being seen.
Speaker AAnd if you can't be seen, you can't be supported.
Speaker AAnd research shows, especially in LGBTQ families, navigating identity discovery and mental health challenges.
Speaker AParents who get support early.
Speaker AWhether it's emotional, educational, or relational, it dramatically improves outcomes for their children.
Speaker ANot because they suddenly become perfect, but because they finally stop trying to do it alone.
Speaker AYour facade is costing you connection.
Speaker AYour silence is costing you support.
Speaker AAnd the pressure you're carrying, trust me, it is not sustainable.
Speaker ASo does this feel true for you?
Speaker AIf people knew what we're going through, they'd judge us.
Speaker ADoes that feel true?
Speaker AThis belief is incredibly common, especially for parents navigating a child's LGBTQ identity or mental health crisis.
Speaker AMany parents fear judgment from family, co workers, church communities, even their own friend circles.
Speaker ABut here's your reality check.
Speaker AYour silence isn't protecting your family.
Speaker AIt's preventing healing.
Speaker ASilence creates shame, and shame shuts down communication.
Speaker ABrene Brown's research is clear.
Speaker AShame festers in the dark, and healing requires light.
Speaker AIt is so important for you to know that other parents are having these same dark thoughts and feeling just as alone as you are.
Speaker AYou are not the exception.
Speaker AYou are the rule.
Speaker AEvery parent I work with arrives convinced that their fears are uniquely terrible until they exhale for the first time and say, oh, other people have thought this too.
Speaker AI know I certainly felt that way.
Speaker AThe judgment you fear is nothing compared to actually losing your child because you were too afraid to get help.
Speaker AThis is the really hard truth.
Speaker AAnd you may face judgment, but you may also save your child's life by refusing to stay silent.
Speaker ATrue strength isn't hiding your struggle.
Speaker AIt's having the courage to say, we need help before you lose control completely.
Speaker AThis is something that took me far too long to say.
Speaker AAnd courage, by the way, does not mean fearlessness.
Speaker ACourage means telling the truth while your voice shakes.
Speaker ACourage means saying, I don't know what to do next, but I'm done doing it all alone.
Speaker ACourage means choosing connection over performance and relief that begins the moment you stop pretending you're okay.
Speaker ASo, look, if you're exhausted from keeping the happy face while panicking inside, if you been doing everything wrong over and over again because you're figuring this out alone and you're terrified you're going to lose your child, but you don't know who to turn to, and what you really want is relief.
Speaker AReal support from someone who gets it and to finally stop pretending everything is fine when it's not, that's exactly why I created the More Human, more kind community and my private coaching inside.
Speaker AYou get a roadmap made just for you.
Speaker AYou get language.
Speaker AYou get tools that actually work.
Speaker AAnd maybe most importantly, you get someone in your corner who understands the terrain you're walking.
Speaker AIf you're interested, go to the Show Notes and click on the link on the bottom.
Speaker AOr visit heatherhester.net and book a Clarity call and let's help you stop hiding and start healing.
Speaker AUntil next time.
Speaker ARemember, you are not alone.
Speaker ASam.